A day before the US
announced measures related to reciprocal tariffs, Moody’s on Tuesday (1 Ap ’25)
said that India is relatively less susceptible to external financial shocks and
will be the fastest-growing advanced and emerging economy. “India has a low external vulnerability indicator
(EVI) of 61 per cent, indicating its relatively lower susceptibility to
external financial shocks,” a report by Moody’s Ratings said. Further,
this is supported by its relatively modest external debt-to-GDP ratio of 19 per
cent and low export dependency on the US (about 2 per cent of GDP).
A Finance Ministry report showed India’s external
debt...to GDP ratio stood at 19.1 per cent at the end of December 2024, against
19 per cent in September 2024, it said. Meanwhile, with the Trump
administration taking charge early this year, the global financial market is
facing turmoil. Especially emerging economies have faced a large outflow of
foreign investment from their stock market, which had an impact on their
currency, including the Indian Rupee. Data showed that from April 1 to March 18
of Fiscal Year 2024-25, the Indian Rupee depreciated by over 3.6 per cent
against the dollar. This is lower than the Korean won (7.17 per cent) and
Canadian Dollar (5.3 per cent) but higher Indonesian Rupiah (3.5 per cent),
Philippine Peso (1.9 per cent) and Chinese Renminbi (0.04 per cent). However, Moody’s believes that India is
still attractive. “Large EMs such as
India and Brazil are better positioned to attract and retain global capital in
risk-averse conditions because of their large and domestically oriented
economies, deep domestic capital markets, moderate policy credibility and
substantial foreign exchange reserves,” the report said.
Also, these
attributes provide buffers against external financial pressures and, as a
result, give investors’ confidence.
“Conversely, countries
with a higher proportion of domestic currency-denominated external debt are
better insulated from exchange rate risks. South Africa, Thailand, Poland and
India are such countries,’ the report said. It highlighted that India’s growth will be better. “India’s growth will
remain the highest of the advanced and emerging G-20 countries, supported by
tax measures and continued easing,” the report said. It estimated India’s
growth at 6.5 per cent for FY 26.
Giving an overall
picture of emerging markets, Moody’s said such economies are “exposed to choppy
waters” from the churn of US policies and its potential to reshape global
capital flows, supply chains, trade and geopolitics. Large EMs (emerging markets) have resources to
navigate the turbulence. It said economic activity in the fastest-growing
economies will slow slightly from high levels but remain strong this year and
next. In China, exports and investment in infrastructure and priority high-tech
sectors remain the main growth drivers, while domestic consumption remains
weak.